Thank you very much.
I love your ideal approach here. This is absolutely what we would love to see—the ability to move these drugs through in a timely fashion, make them available to everybody at the same time and certainly, as you say, have equitable access right across the provinces.
What we know—this is where the details come in—is that, with the way the system works now in the public plan, they get bogged down. They get bogged down in many steps of bureaucracy. Quite frankly, we know the drug plans themselves do not allocate enough money. In many countries—let me get outside of the U.S.—there is a sense that the best drugs are an investment. I heard what Ms. Silas was saying. The trouble is that, if you're not providing people with their optimal therapy or not making sure they get the medication that's actually going to keep them alive or out of hospital, if you're providing everybody with the same therapy, which is sometimes what happens or you won't invest in the best therapies, then, in fact, it doesn't work.
That's our concern. In many cases, it comes down to the lowest-common-denominator drug.